When the St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press realized
its press runs were too large, it turned to a local company for help.
Blaine, Minn.-based Kim Automation had years of
experience installing controls managing assembly lines and product distribution
centers. Kim typically buys off-the-shelf components and assembles them into
control systems relying on programmable logic controllers.
The primary driver to installing a new
counting and totalizing system was to reduce newsprint waste, said Michael
Garayantes, the Pioneer Press assistant pressroom manager. We were seeing
a combination of shortages at the end of production runs in the downstream end
of the packaging department, along with significant overages.
But the Pioneer Press (Monday-Friday, 189,994;
Saturday 170,111; Sunday 251,956) offered Kim a unique challenge: measuring the
somewhat irregular paths of newspapers flying off presses at a rate exceeding
35,000 per hour.
Sensing the count
The answer: photoelectric sensors, used to detect
the motion of a newspaper past a fixed point. Kim added filters to clean up the
sensors to permit them to send crisp signals to the processors for accurate
counts.

Optical sensors installed by Kim Automation
perform exact counts of newspapers coming off Goss Metroliners at the St. Paul
Pioneer Press.
Photos: Kim Automation

Press displays show various information
such as good count, bad count and slow down setpoints at the Pioneer Press.
Photos: Kim Automation
Kims monitoring equipment augments the Goss
Control System Two press management system originally installed on the Pioneer
Press three Goss Metroliner presses.
The subsequent system boasts monochrome displays
that monitor press performance, speeds, the actual good count for a
particular line and the total paper count.
Run prediction times are also provided, using all
known variables, updated in real time. When the run approaches a given set
range, the console sends a warning to the operator to begin the shutdown
process.
The three lines performance data are
transmitted to a central supervisory area, where the information is compared.
That approach gives the Pioneer Press more
flexibility, said Garayantes. If one press goes down, for example, operators
immediately know what they need to do to increase the output of the other
presses to take up the slack.
Pick counts and updates occur in real time,
making the displays appear similar to a gasoline pump.
Helped downstream
Garayantes says the new monitoring system is so
accurate that the Metroliners are now within .1 percent of optimum performance
on a 300,000-copy press run.
There have been other benefits as well.
Because Kims system was calibrated, its
allowed us to find issues with downstream equipment like stackers, where before
we were trying to rely on data that may or may not have been accurate,
Garayantes said.
Thats because the counters previously tracked
the revolutions of the press and not the actual copies of the papers coming off,
Garayantes said.
Training time was minimal, according to
Garayantes. A keypad is used to enter in the desired run length, and the system
essentially does the rest.